Rumours of Rain
Encyclopedia
Rumours of Rain is a South Africa
n novel
by André Brink
, published in (1978). It was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. It is set on a South African farm during apartheid.
It is a long drive to the farm and he does not often go there. He takes his son Louis along to get closer to him. Since Louis has come back from the Angolan War of Independence
, he is traumatized and silent. The imagined good talk between them makes matters worse, though - the father begins by asking his son casually about his „trip to Angola“, and when Louis finally opens up and talks about the atrocities of the war, they end up arguing about politics.
The farm is extremely drought-stricken, and Martin's mother has invited a water diviner to look for an underground stream. Martin thinks this is ridiculous. When he then visits the family graveyard for one last time, loses his glasses, so that from then on the egocentric man is in every sense of the word “blind” to the events happening around him.
At night, a black worker murders his wife and is taken to prison, leaving a baby and older children behind. This is regarded by the whites as “typical” tribal behavior and helps Martin to underline his opinion that his mother should not run the farm on her own because it is too dangerous (although the real reason is that he will get a good price for the farm). The visit of a few neighbours, who are also farmers, shows that most people in the area are selling their land, which is regarded by those who stay on their family farms as treason.
When Martin – still almost blind without his glasses – gets lost in the jungle on a short walk, almost not making it back to the farm where he was born and raised, it is obvious that he does not belong here. Father and son drive home. The farm will be sold and Martin's mother will live with their family althugh she and Martin's wife do not get along. Louis gets an ultimatum to find a job, after which he disappears and never comes back.
South Africa
The Republic of South Africa is a country in southern Africa. Located at the southern tip of Africa, it is divided into nine provinces, with of coastline on the Atlantic and Indian oceans...
n novel
Novel
A novel is a book of long narrative in literary prose. The genre has historical roots both in the fields of the medieval and early modern romance and in the tradition of the novella. The latter supplied the present generic term in the late 18th century....
by André Brink
André Brink
André Philippus Brink, OIS, is a South African novelist. He writes in Afrikaans and English and is a Professor of English at the University of Cape Town....
, published in (1978). It was shortlisted for the Booker Prize. It is set on a South African farm during apartheid.
Plot summary
Martin, the narrator, a rich South African businessman, recalls the events of a weekend which settled the future of his family farm: he wants to sell it although he has promised his father on his death-bed that he will never do so, and although his brother wants to take it over. So he visits the farm for a weekend to tell his mother she will be „evicted“. For the trip, he calls off a meeting with his lover Bea, who leaves him for that (because she wanted to tell him that she is pregnant).It is a long drive to the farm and he does not often go there. He takes his son Louis along to get closer to him. Since Louis has come back from the Angolan War of Independence
Angolan War of Independence
The Angolan War of Independence began as an uprising against forced cotton cultivation, and became a multi-faction struggle for control of Portugal's Overseas Province of Angola with three nationalist movements and a separatist movement...
, he is traumatized and silent. The imagined good talk between them makes matters worse, though - the father begins by asking his son casually about his „trip to Angola“, and when Louis finally opens up and talks about the atrocities of the war, they end up arguing about politics.
The farm is extremely drought-stricken, and Martin's mother has invited a water diviner to look for an underground stream. Martin thinks this is ridiculous. When he then visits the family graveyard for one last time, loses his glasses, so that from then on the egocentric man is in every sense of the word “blind” to the events happening around him.
At night, a black worker murders his wife and is taken to prison, leaving a baby and older children behind. This is regarded by the whites as “typical” tribal behavior and helps Martin to underline his opinion that his mother should not run the farm on her own because it is too dangerous (although the real reason is that he will get a good price for the farm). The visit of a few neighbours, who are also farmers, shows that most people in the area are selling their land, which is regarded by those who stay on their family farms as treason.
When Martin – still almost blind without his glasses – gets lost in the jungle on a short walk, almost not making it back to the farm where he was born and raised, it is obvious that he does not belong here. Father and son drive home. The farm will be sold and Martin's mother will live with their family althugh she and Martin's wife do not get along. Louis gets an ultimatum to find a job, after which he disappears and never comes back.